PIKE (2 page)

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Authors: Benjamin Whitmer

BOOK: PIKE
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BOOK I

And blended horrors stare before her eyes,
Even in that time, when all should be at rest,
When not one thought should discompose her breast

— Blind Harry

CHAPTER 1
~ You ain’t nearly as big as I expected.~

T
here’s no trouble spotting Dana. She comes through the door leading with her greasy pelvis, wearing a pink winter coat that looks to have been run over by a garbage truck. A dirty black-haired girl skulks behind her, maybe twelve or thirteen, wearing a tattered sweatshirt an inch too thin for the weather. Dana’s eyes land on Pike as if she knows him, and she shambles over and shoves the girl in his booth, then slides with her head ducked down like she’s afraid somebody might see her. There’s little doubt anybody hasn’t. The diner’s filled with miners heading in for the first shift, slurping coffee, rustling newspapers, calling to each other as they shoulder in and out of the cold, all of them with half an eye in her direction from the moment she stepped through the door. It’s a small town, Nanticonte.

“You ain’t nearly as big as I expected,” she says.

Pike ignores that. “How’d she die?”

“Give Wendy some change,” Dana says. “I saw a newspaper machine on the way in. She likes to read.”

Pike digs a quarter out of his pocket. The girl snatches it, pushes past Dana. She’s holding a gray and white kitten in her arms. It stretches its jaw and its pink tongue flicks out at the grease in the air as though trying to catch snowflakes, its eyeteeth like slivers of ice.

“How did she die?” Pike repeats.

Dana snuffles, wipes a long stream of snot down her pink coat sleeve. “She overdosed. Heroin.”

It’s not a surprise. But Pike misses when he ashes his cigarette at the ashtray. Tobacco embers swirl in the greasy air, rest sizzling in the thick black hair of his arm. He barely notices them. “When?”

“Last week.” Dana reaches across the table and swipes one of his filterless Pall Malls and lights it with his lighter.

Wendy returns, a newspaper folded clumsily under her right arm. Pike ticks his head at Iris, the waitress. She elbows her way to their table, arriving at the same time as Wendy. “Take her to the bar and get her some blueberry pancakes,” Pike says. He looks at Dana. “You need anything?”

“I could use some coffee,” Dana answers.

“C’mon, honey,” Iris says. She lays a hand on Wendy’s shoulder, leads her away.

Every seat in the diner’s full. Iris grabs a plate that’s almost empty off the counter and tells the miner who had been eating that he might want to get out in the world and work for a living. The miner sits for a minute, smoking his cigarette and staring at her as if expecting she might return his plate. When she doesn’t, he keeps staring at her like he might get angry about it. Finally, he plants his John Deere hat on his head and stands, shaking his head in amazement. Iris sits Wendy down, yelling out an order for blueberry pancakes. The girl hunches down on her stool, stroking her kitten’s head, her narrow face pale and her wide blue eyes darting around the room, scared and over-stimulated.

Iris returns to the table with Dana’s coffee. “She’s adorable,” she says. “Your daughter?”

Dana snorts. “I can’t have kids. I was born with two uteruses growing against each other. I had to have both of them chopped out when I got pregnant after my father raped me.”

Both of Iris’s eyebrows raise. She turns and walks away.

Dana snorts. “Uppity bitch, ain’t she?”

“Who’s the girl’s mother?” Pike asks.

Dana grins maliciously. “Sarah.”

Pike nods. As if there was any way that wouldn’t be the answer. “Did she find the body?”

“No, and you can thank fucking Christ she didn’t. Not after what they’d done to it.”

“They who?”

Dana shakes her head, shudders.

“I can’t take her,” Pike says. “I don’t have anywhere to put her.”

“If there was anybody else, I’d be talking to them.”

“What about Sarah’s mother?”

“Alice?”

Pike nods.

“Alice caught a case of lung cancer. She’s been dead for years.” Dana’s eyes are like powderburns. “When was the last time you talked to Sarah?”

Pike draws on his cigarette.

Dana takes another drink of her coffee and sets her cup down solidly on the saucer. “No more of this horseshit,” she says, standing. “I’m leaving.”

“Hold on.” Pike peels a twenty-dollar bill out of his wallet. She eyes the bill like she’d like to crumple it up and throw it in his face. “Take it,” Pike says. “For your gas and your time.”

She grabs the bill and fists it in her pocket.

Pike pulls another twenty out of his wallet, holds it between his fingers. “Where was she living?”

Dana wipes snot down her slimy pink sleeve. “In Over-the-Rhine,” she says finally, snatching the bill. “Cincinnati, 400 Mulberry Street.” She makes for the door, dragging the eyes of every diner in the restaurant in her wake.

CHAPTER 2
~ Iris looks at him like he’s grown a second head. ~

P
ike’s face closes, he can’t help it. He thinks of Sarah and blood pours into his ears like a vessel has burst somewhere back in his brain, flooding away the sounds of the diner in an oceanic roar. The patrons hush around him, a cloud of thick viscous quiet spreading out from him like an oil spill, but he can’t stop himself from thinking about her. He stops trying. For a minute. Then, “What’s up, man?”

Pike chisels his daughter off his features. Rory stands over him, his square-jawed face screwed up in curiosity.

“You okay?” Rory asks. He’s wearing jogging pants and a sweatshirt, a light sheen of perspiration across his blonde buzz-cut head.

Pike nods slowly. Rory slides in the booth. “Smile or something, before somebody calls a cop,” he says out of the corner of his mouth. “We working today and I forgot?”

Pike shakes his head. “I had to meet someone.”

“Who?” Rory’s left eye narrows. “You ain’t got no friends.”

Pike fishes a Pall Mall out of his pack, his face slipping back into the funereal scowl. He rolls the cigarette in his fingers without lighting it.

“Not that hooker that just walked out of here?” Rory shakes his head. “Pike, you’re old, you’re ugly and you’re mean, but even you can do better.”

“What’re you having, Rory?” Iris asks, suddenly standing by the booth.

“Heya, Iris.” Rory gives her a boyish grin. “Half a grapefruit and a glass of orange juice.”

Iris jots down his order. “I don’t think that girl’s ate anything indays,” she says to Pike. “She’s been through three orders of pancakes already.”

“What girl?” Rory asks.

“That little girl over there.” Iris points with her pen.

Rory cranes his neck. Wendy’s at the bar, working over a fresh plate of blueberry pancakes, her snow boots hanging off the stool, dripping dirty water in a pool beneath her. “Who is she?” he asks.

“She came in with one of Pike’s friends,” Iris says. “The kind we always knew he had, but could never prove. Looks like she left her here.”

“Rory gave you an order,” Pike says to her. “Go get his food.”

Iris taps her pen on the palm of her hand, looking at Pike.

“Fine.” Pike sets his jaw. “Fetch her.”

“Can do,” Iris says, smiling big and turning on her heel.

“I think Iris likes you a little bit,” Rory says, when she’s out of earshot.

Pike ignores him, watching Iris talk to Wendy, ruffling her hair. Then she and Iris are standing at his table.

Pike clears his throat. “Do you know who I am?” he asks her.

The girl shakes her head, the right corner of her mouth twitching angrily.

“I’m your grandfather.” Pike exhales cigarette smoke through his nose. “You’ll be staying with me.”

Iris’s jaw drops over the girl’s head, Rory whistles softly. Wendy just glowers. “I don’t want to.”

“I’m not sure how many options you have.”

Wendy’s eyes crack like twin windows smashed in a hailstorm, then flood through with tears. “Shh, baby,” Iris says, holding her shoulders as she tries to wriggle away.

“Fuck you,” Wendy says over her shoulder. She whips around at Pike and spits full his face. “Fuck you, too.”

Pike peels his glasses off and wipes the spittle on his T-shirt. “You’ll be safe with me.”

“I don’t want to be safe. You fucking pedophile.” She drops her chin, her broad forehead looming over her raging eyes. You can tell it’s the worst thing she can think to call somebody.

“Let her go,” Pike says.

Iris looks at him like he’s grown a second head. Then seeing he’s not joking, she relaxes her hands and steps back from Wendy.

“Tonight you stay at my place,” Pike says to her. “Tomorrow if you’ve got anywhere to go, I’ll stand you the money for a bus ticket.” He speaks slowly, enunciating his words carefully like he’s talking to a spooked horse. “But you can stay as long as you want, too. The only thing I’m asking is that you sleep on it. Sleep on it for a night.”

She stands very still, as though carved out of a block of slow dried ice.

“I’m gonna step outside and have a cigarette.” Pike pulls on his work coat. “I’ll wait for you until I’m done. There ain’t much I can do if you decide to run off. But I’d prefer it if you didn’t.”

Iris looks at Pike like she’d prefer to run him through a wood chipper. Wendy stands with her hands folded around the kitten, tears and snot dripping off her pointed chin and landing in small sharp splats on her boots.

“Come on, Rory,” Pike says, shouldering past Iris, his eyes blank and fixed straight on the door.

CHAPTER 3
~ It don’t mean I like you. ~

R
ory cups his hands to blow heat in them, his lungs contracting in the cold. “You don’t think she’s a little young to be put on the spot like that?” he says to Pike.

Pike hocks phlegm past a fresh Pall Mall he’s about to stick in his mouth. “I wasn’t any younger’n her when I started out on my own.”

“I look at you and I see a man who could’ve used a little more love in his early years.”

Pike lights the cigarette, the flame glinting off the gray in his beard. “When men thus weep their courage grows the less.”

“Sure. That, and you’re a weird motherfucker.”

The door opens and Wendy glowers through it, her kitten burrowed down in her sweatshirt, its tiny street-crazed face peeking out over the zipper.

“I was hoping you’d come,” Pike says.

“It don’t mean I like you.” Wendy looks up at him like he’s a huge oak tree, stroking the kitten between the eyes. “I’ve heard my mother talk about you.”

Pike smoothes down his beard, his scarred hand the size of her head. “Never doubted it for a minute.”

They walk back towards Pike’s apartment. It’s one room in a brick industrial building that looms like a palisade over the small valley town. It once officed Anaconda and still carries their name in fading ten foot letters. The first flicker of Appalachian sunlight cracks over it like an egg. “So what’s the kitten’s name?” Rory asks.

“Monster.”

“He don’t look so monstrous to me.” Rory reaches out to pat thekitten on the head. It hisses, its fangs flashing in the cold air. “Jesus,” Rory yelps, yanking his hand back.

“Monster,” Wendy repeats.

Rory shakes his hand as if to make sure it’s still attached. “Does he get more friendly?”

“With some people.” Wendy kisses the top of the kitten’s head. “Not inbred rednecks.”

Rory elbows Pike. “I think she insulted me.” He’s silent for a little while. Then he tries again. “So what grade are you in?”

“Seventh.”

“Seventh,” he repeats, as though impressed. “Seventh grade’s a good grade.”

“That about when you dropped out?”

Pike flicks his spent Pall Mall at an iced-over elm. “Stop setting yourself up, Rory,” he says. “It hurts to watch.”

Wendy snorts. Her face is thin and white, her limbs are starting to tremble with exhaustion. She appears to need all the venom she can muster just to stay upright. “You might as well tell the sun to stop rising.”

“That’s it,” Rory says, veering off the sidewalk. “I’m heading home.” He turns, walking backwards. “You coming to see me tomorrow?” he asks Pike.

“Depends on Wendy,” Pike says.

“Bring her,” Rory says. “She might enjoy it. There’s always a chance I might get my head stove in.”

Wendy doesn’t answer. She looks like a flower in the middle of wilting.

CHAPTER 4
~ Dingy and smoking and a lot smaller than it looked last night. ~

T
hree nights of rioting, there’s no winding down. Derrick stands at the window of his fifth floor apartment, holding a glass of Jim Beam. Below the street’s licked with the flames of a burning car, a pack of boys warming themselves before it, drinking beer and beating their good cheer on each other’s arms and chests. Firelight and shadows flicker behind them, over the spires and ironwork of the Queen Anne storefronts, the arched windows winking at the rising sparks as if gleeful at seeing the city on fire. Given the cold, Derrick didn’t think the riots would make it past the first night, but the mob just made its own sources of heat. He raises his glass to his mouth, drains the contents in one long swallow, washing away the taste of burning plastic with bourbon.

When he first joined the department he thought of the city as a river, as the big muddy Ohio that separated Cincinnati from Kentucky. Of each citizen as a tributary running into a common body of law, of order. He saw his talents as to channel it by force. He should have known better. There’s always been different currents at work than he thought. Stored up in the ghettos until it bursts in an electric blossom like what’s burning below. And whatever’s to contain it, it ain’t law and it ain’t order. Derrick’s learned that as a cop. The first time he found a six-year-old girl with her intestines hanging out her asshole, and her mother unwilling to finger her boyfriend. Him leaning on the wall grinning, the smell of shit still on his dick. Then picking up a kid for dealing pot the same day. The law’s never enough and it’s always too much.

Something moves in the hallway, scuffling, shouting, banging on doors. Derrick snaps out of his thoughts and picks his Colt off the leather couch, the metal and wood cold in his hand. He crosses thecarpet silently, flicking off the lights. It scratches at his front door. Derrick yanks it open, drops his barrel. An olive-skinned girl wearing a pea coat, holding a baby. Derrick pulls her in by the back of the neck, locks the door after her.

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